Looking for cloud infrastructure that doesn't fold under attack? Whether you're running game servers constantly targeted by rivals or hosting APIs that occasionally spike to 8x normal load, most cloud providers either charge you an arm and a leg for DDoS protection or can't handle sudden traffic bursts without crashing. SharkTech's OpenStack cloud servers come with 60Gbps DDoS protection included and support up to 8x resource bursting—meaning you get enterprise-grade security and elasticity without the enterprise-grade invoice shock.
SharkTech has been in the DDoS protection business since 2003, so they know a thing or two about keeping servers online when someone really doesn't want them to be. Their cloud servers run on OpenStack architecture in US and Netherlands data centers, which is just a fancy way of saying the underlying tech is solid and widely trusted.
Here's what makes their setup different: every cloud instance includes 60Gbps of DDoS protection as standard. Not as an add-on. Not as a "contact sales for pricing" enterprise feature. Just... included. For context, most attacks you'll encounter in the wild top out well below 60Gbps, so this baseline coverage handles the majority of real-world threats without you lifting a finger.
The other interesting bit is the burst capacity. SharkTech provisions their cloud servers with a 4x burst multiplier by default, with some configurations supporting up to 8x. In plain English: if you normally use 2 CPU cores but suddenly need 8 because you got featured on Hacker News, the system automatically gives you those extra cores temporarily. You're not paying for 8 cores sitting idle 99% of the time, but you're also not watching your site crawl to a halt during traffic spikes.
The cloud platform uses OpenStack, which is basically the open-source answer to AWS's proprietary cloud stack. Resources scale in real-time through a straightforward web interface—no need to file support tickets or wait for manual provisioning. You can adjust CPU, memory, and storage on the fly as needs change.
Storage runs on SSDs across the board. The base configuration starts at 300GB, which is plenty for most applications unless you're hosting media files or running database-heavy operations. Traffic allocations are generous too—5TB monthly on the entry tier, which translates to roughly 15Mbps sustained bandwidth if you actually used it all month (most people don't come close).
Network connectivity includes 1-16 IPv4 addresses depending on your plan. If you're running multiple services or need dedicated IPs for SSL certificates, email reputation, or API endpoints, having that flexibility built in saves hassle later. The enterprise tier removes IP limits entirely, though at that point you're probably coordinating directly with their network team anyway.
👉 Check current SharkTech cloud server availability and DDoS protection specs here
The 60Gbps baseline protection upgrades to 1Tbps if you need it, which puts you in the territory of handling nation-state level attacks or extremely motivated adversaries. For perspective, the infamous Mirai botnet attacks that took down major sites in 2016 peaked around 600Gbps. Most businesses will never need anywhere near 1Tbps, but it's there if your threat model demands it.
Entry configuration runs $43.82/month for 8GB RAM, 4 CPU cores, 300GB SSD storage, and 5TB bandwidth. That's the "Small" tier in their lineup. Compared to major cloud providers where DDoS protection costs extra (often significantly extra), this pricing structure makes more sense for workloads that actually face attack risks.
Payment options include the usual suspects—credit cards, PayPal, Alipay—plus Bitcoin, Wise, and Western Union for those preferring alternative methods. No payment method surcharges, which is refreshing since some hosts tack on fees for certain options.
Gaming infrastructure is the obvious use case. Game servers attract DDoS attacks like honey attracts flies, often from competitors or disgruntled players. Having built-in protection means you're not scrambling to migrate providers mid-attack or paying emergency mitigation fees.
API services and web applications that experience variable load also benefit from the burst architecture. If your traffic pattern looks like a flat line punctuated by occasional spikes—think product launches, viral content, scheduled data syncs—paying for constant high capacity wastes money. The burst model charges you for baseline resources but lets you temporarily scale up when needed.
Content delivery and media streaming can work well here too, assuming your audience aligns geographically with the US or European data center locations. The generous bandwidth allocations and burst capacity handle viewership spikes without buffering or downtime.
Cryptocurrency services, financial platforms, and anything in the betting/gambling space frequently face both DDoS attacks and regulatory requirements around infrastructure security. Having defense-in-depth from the infrastructure layer up satisfies some compliance checkboxes while actually protecting operations.
If your primary concern is latency to Asia-Pacific regions, SharkTech's current data center footprint (US and Netherlands) won't be optimal. Physics still matters—you can't cheat the speed of light across the Pacific. For truly global low-latency requirements, you'd want additional edge locations closer to those users.
The platform is also somewhat specialized. If you need the vast ecosystem of managed services that AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud provide—everything from machine learning APIs to managed databases to serverless functions—SharkTech's OpenStack cloud is more bare-bones. You're getting compute, storage, and network, with excellent DDoS protection. The rest you build or integrate yourself.
For workloads that genuinely never face attack risks and have completely predictable resource needs, you might find cheaper options elsewhere. The DDoS protection you're paying for provides zero value if nobody ever attacks you. But most people overestimate how predictable their infrastructure needs are and underestimate the likelihood of attacks, so this applies to fewer situations than you'd think.
SharkTech's cloud servers solve a specific problem: you need reliable compute resources that won't fall over under attack and can handle traffic variability without constant manual intervention. The OpenStack foundation provides solid technical fundamentals, the burst architecture prevents over-provisioning waste, and the included DDoS protection eliminates a major vulnerability that most cloud deployments handle poorly or expensively.
Starting at $43.82/month with 8GB RAM, 4 cores, 300GB SSD, 5TB bandwidth, and 60Gbps DDoS protection, this setup makes practical sense for applications facing real-world security threats and variable resource demands. 👉 Explore SharkTech's cloud infrastructure and find a configuration that matches your specific security and scaling requirements. The combination of included protection, burst capacity, and straightforward pricing removes typical cloud deployment headaches—which is exactly what infrastructure should do.